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No to indoor stuff.
Yes to hiking and playing in the yard and contact with neighborhood kids who are staying away from indoor places as well. |
| The virus can travel 6 feet. When you go to the park do you think you're farther than 6 feet from people at all times? What if one of them sneezes on a handrail and you don't notice but walk by it later? I don't have any anxiety and I'm quite calm about this, but the disinformation out there is astounding. Or not, I guess, when you see what's coming out of the White House. |
| What about a birthday party at a gymnastics place? |
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My kids always got sick after a visit to the trampoline park. Every time. And that was pre-Covid-19, OP.
But you do you, boo. |
Nope. Kid after kid touching the same gym equipment. |
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| And Nay to any indoor play spaces. |
| Yes to park, but no playground. Just basketball, soccer, running around and bring hand sanitizer. Yes to trails. No to anything indoors-germ central. |
+1 |
| Props to whoever in one of the mega thread called this exact scenario. |
| I think ZavaZone is being really careful about wiping and cleaning. I saw they had extra staff and were really trying to keep things wiped down and extra clean. |
No. I was thinking more outdoor shooting hoops with one neighbor kid. |
| Op, don't you think that kind of defeats the purpose |
| I’m not understanding why people are clamoring for the schools to close, yet also searching for activities to take their kids out and about. Seems to defeat the purpose. If they can be out and about mixing with the general public, shouldn’t they just remain in school? |
This virus will eventually infect a majority of Americans. Mitigation efforts are about keeping it from spiraling out of control all at once and overwhelming hospitals, not making sure no one gets it, especially healthy kids. Shutting down schools and cancelling big events is what we need to control rapid spread, not avoiding parks and small businesses. |